Philippine doctor Russell Salic is escorted by National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) agents for a court hearing in Manila yesterday.

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AFP/Manila

A Filipino doctor accused of wiring money for a foiled New York terror plot appeared in a Manila court yesterday to fight extradition to the US, saying the Islamic State group hacked his social media accounts. Russell Salic and two others have been charged with involvement in the plan to stage attacks targeting New York’s subway, Times Square and concert venues in the name of IS in 2016. Salic, a 37-year-old orthopaedic surgeon, appeared on the first day of the hearing in Manila to extradite him to the United States. In a written deposition, Salic said IS and its sympathisers gained control of his online accounts after he “condemned” the group in 2015. “This group was able to ‘HACK’ my FB (Facebook) account and my e-mail address account,” he said in the signed statement his lawyer submitted to the court last month and obtained by AFP yesterday. US authorities and the Philippine military have accused Salic of posting pro-IS content online and sending money to other countries in support of the militants. Salic is accused of transferring $423 in May 2016 to the other suspects as part of the thwarted operation, which was planned through Internet messaging, according to the US justice department. The bombing plot was monitored by an undercover Federal Bureau of Investigation agent posing as a fellow militant, US authorities said. The US justice department said Salic told the FBI agent through a messaging application: “It would be a great pleasure if we can slaughter” people in New York. Salic, who was led out of the court in handcuffs yesterday, said in his deposition that he had given money to international groups helping war victims and clubfoot patients as well as an unspecified organisation in Malaysia aiding the Muslim Rohingya in Myanmar. “I got into trouble because of my desire to help needy people, not terrorist(s). Modesty aside, I am by nature a good man,” his statement said. Asked by reporters why his name had come up in the US investigation, he said: “Because I donated to charity.” Christopher Cardani, the US justice department attache in Manila, said Washington was working with local authorities to have Salic extradited “as soon as possible”. “We look forward to giving him that day, that he will be given an opportunity to state his case before an American jury. This is an extremely important matter to the United States,” Cardani told reporters.